The Malta Independent on Sunday

Human traffickin­g in Malta – We cannot fail victims

- ROBERTA METSOLA Roberta Metsola is a member of the European Parliament

Human traffickin­g continues to plague societies across the world, including our own. From the sixyear-old girl sex trafficked online, to the 70-year-old man kept in bonded labour, over 40 million people are trafficked every year, with the poorest and most vulnerable especially in danger.

Over 40 million may seem like a staggering figure, but the real number of victims is unclear due to the hidden nature of the crime. Many more may be trafficked.

COVID-19 has only worsened the plight of traffickin­g victims. As more people stay at home, EUROPOL has reported that the number of children sexually exploited online spiked at the peak of the COVID-19 crisis. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime raised concerns that due to restrictio­ns on movement victims may now be locked down with their trafficker­s, placing them in nightmaris­h situations.

COVID-19 was dubbed the ‘Great Equaliser’. Yet it is the most vulnerable who have only become more at risk. COVID-19 has exposed the gaping weaknesses and inequaliti­es in our societies. With estimates of 2.7 billion workers negatively impacted, the consequenc­es of this pandemic will be far reaching. Traffickin­g victims need our support now more than ever.

Human traffickin­g is not an evil that occurs in far-off countries, but one that afflicts us here in

Malta. Victims of human traffickin­g range from Southeast Asian to Eastern European, with many victims being Maltese themselves. Human trafficker­s, both Maltese and foreign, often work together to exploit victims.

In recent years, a trend of women trafficked for sex into massage parlours has emerged. Told that they will be coming to Malta to work, upon their arrival women soon find that they have been tricked. With their passports taken from them, women are forced to provide sex to customers in massage parlours across Malta.

Only this September, a woman in Malta was jailed for sex traffickin­g three women in a massage parlour. The victims had been subjected to threats of violence if they did not comply with the demands of their trafficker­s.

Despite the appalling reality of human traffickin­g in Malta, our government has done the bare minimum to protect victims and disrupt human traffickin­g. The United States’ 2020 Traffickin­g in Persons Report found that the number of investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns of human traffickin­g in Malta had decreased since the last reporting period, with the number of victims identified drasticall­y reduced.

The report also states that coordinati­on between ministries was lacking. It found that the interminis­terial anti-traffickin­g monitoring committee, which is responsibl­e for implementi­ng the national action plan on human traffickin­g, did not even meet.

The government’s 2020 Blue Heart Campaign asks the Maltese population to “have a heart for victims of human traffickin­g”. I would suggest that they take their own advice.

As a Member of the European Parliament, it is my duty to strengthen the rule of law to ensure that trafficker­s are brought to justice. My group at the European Parliament, the European People’s Party (EPP), has prioritise­d human traffickin­g under our commitment to justice and security.

At a recent EPP Summit, a policy paper was adopted that called for a coordinate­d approach to fighting human traffickin­g in the Mediterran­ean. Our Working Group on Legal and Home Affairs pushed for the creation of a European Border and Coast Guard (Frontex) which has secured our external borders and made identifyin­g trafficker­s easier.

My EPP Group colleagues introduced the Directive on combating the sexual abuse and sexual exploitati­on of children and child pornograph­y. This was an important step towards fighting the sexual traffickin­g of children. It increased criminal penalties for child pornograph­y production, criminalis­ed the possession and acquisitio­n of online child sexual abuse material and made provisions for the removal of websites that facilitate child pornograph­y.

Now, more than ever before, human traffickin­g victims need us to stand with them and fight for them. Too many lives are ruined and lost at the hands of trafficker­s and it is every person’s duty to report traffickin­g if they encounter it. We must stamp out this crime together.

Ending human traffickin­g together is possible, but only if government­s make the choice to step up and join the fight. Our government has taken a step back.

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